Franchi Carlotta, Ardoino Ilaria, Mandelli Sara, Patel Linia, Pelucchi Claudio, Bonzi Rossella, Camargo M Constanza, Rabkin Charles S, Liao Linda M, Sinha Rashmi, Johnson Kenneth C, Hu Jinfu, Zhang Zuo-Feng, Palli Domenico, Ferraroni Monica, Negri Eva, Turati Federica, Yu Guo-Pei, Lunet Nuno, Morais Samantha, López-Carrillo Lizbeth, Tsugane Shoichiro, Hidaka Akihisa, Malekzadeh Reza, Zaridze David, Maximovitch Dmitry, Vioque Jesus, Gonzalez-Palacios Sandra, Ward Mary H, Aragonés Nuria, Castaño-Vinyals Gemma, Curado Maria Paula, Dias-Neto Emmanuel, Hamada Gerson Shigueaki, Hernández-Ramirez Raul Ulises, Pakseresht Mohammadreza, Pourfarzi Farhad, Mu Lina, Lagiou Areti, Lagiou Pagona, López-Cervantes Malaquias, Dolci Alberto, Boccia Stefania, Pastorino Roberta, Boffetta Paolo, D'Avanzo Barbara, La Vecchia Carlo
Laboratory of Pharmacoepidemiology and Human Nutrition, Department of Health Policy, Istituto di Ricerche Farmacologiche Mario Negri IRCCS, Via Mario Negri, 2, 20156, Milano, Italy.
Italian Institute for Planetary Health (IIPH), Milan, Italy.
Sci Rep. 2025 Apr 16;15(1):13099. doi: 10.1038/s41598-025-96658-4.
Gastric cancer is among the most common cancer and cause of cancer death. We conducted a meta-analysis of 25 case-control studies from the Stomach cancer Pooling Project to assess the association between fish or canned fish consumption and the risk of gastric cancer. 10,431 cases and 24,903 controls were available. We found no association between fish consumption and risk of gastric cancer (pooled odds ratios (OR) = 0.99; 95% confidence interval (CI) 0.86-1.13, for at least one serving/week vs none). Geographical differences were found: in Asia an increased intake of fish was associated with a lower stomach cancer risk. In the sensitivity analyses, fish consumption was associated to a lower risk of gastric cancer in models adjusted for family history of gastric cancer (OR = 0.80, 95% CI 0.72-0.89) and Helicobacter Pylori infection (OR = 0.72, 95% CI 0.60-0.88), but not for body mass index or energy intake. Seven studies collected information on canned fish (4525 cases and 8073 controls). No association was found for canned fish (OR = 0.96, 95% CI 0.82-1.13). In conclusion, our results provide evidence that fish and canned fish intake are not associated with gastric cancer risk, although geographical differences have been highlighted, with a lower risk of gastric cancer in Asia.
胃癌是最常见的癌症之一,也是癌症死亡的主要原因。我们对来自胃癌合并项目的25项病例对照研究进行了荟萃分析,以评估食用鱼类或罐装鱼与胃癌风险之间的关联。共有10431例病例和24903例对照。我们发现食用鱼类与胃癌风险之间没有关联(合并比值比(OR)=0.99;95%置信区间(CI)为0.86-1.13,每周至少食用一份与不食用相比)。研究发现存在地域差异:在亚洲,鱼类摄入量增加与较低的胃癌风险相关。在敏感性分析中,在针对胃癌家族史(OR=0.80,95%CI为0.72-0.89)和幽门螺杆菌感染(OR=0.72,95%CI为0.60-0.88)进行调整的模型中,食用鱼类与较低的胃癌风险相关,但与体重指数或能量摄入无关。七项研究收集了关于罐装鱼的信息(4525例病例和8073例对照)。未发现罐装鱼与胃癌风险之间存在关联(OR=0.96,95%CI为0.82-1.13)。总之,我们的研究结果表明,尽管突出了地域差异,亚洲胃癌风险较低,但鱼类和罐装鱼的摄入量与胃癌风险无关。